Still, this latest setback prompted questions about whether Curry working out on his own, instead of with teammates before training camp, left him unable to handle the pace of workouts far more grueling than anything D’Antoni ran in Phoenix, Amar’e Stoudemire said.

Team president Donnie Walsh, while saying “I’m not questioning” Curry’s decision, suggested that Curry couldn’t keep up because of being out of shape, possibly causing this injury.

“The weight he came in at [more than 300 pounds], it wasn’t outrageous for Eddy,” Walsh said. “He’s a big man. My feeling was he could lose that weight rather quickly. The problem was at the pace we’re going now, his body just wasn’t ready for it.”

And it’s a far different pace than D’Antoni’s first two camps with the Knicks, one designed to take advantage of a roster with 11 new players, and athletic ones such as Stoudemire, Raymond Felton and Anthony Randolph — even surprisingly athletic Russian rookie center Timofey Mozgov.

Players who can run. And run. And run.

“We have some athletes out here,” D’Antoni said. “So we feel like in January and February, this will pay off.”

“We’ve got fast, athletic bigs who can get up and down with the best of them,” Stoudemire said. “So we’ve got to take advantage of that. And we’re also versatile, where our bigs can also catch the ball at midcourt and break the defense down and create for themselves.”

Curry, who did not speak to reporters Monday and is one of only two players left from Isiah Thomas’ regime (Wilson Chandler is the other), pulled up lame during a Sunday scrimmage, sending red flags flying again about his health.

Last year, he tore a calf muscle the first day of camp and didn’t play until Nov. 18.

The year before, he missed the first week of camp with a stomach virus.

Curry won’t travel with the Knicks when they leave for Europe on Wednesday and will miss all of camp.

Still, this latest setback prompted questions about whether Curry working out on his own, instead of with teammates before training camp, left him unable to handle the pace of workouts far more grueling than anything D’Antoni ran in Phoenix, Amar’e Stoudemire said.

Team president Donnie Walsh, while saying “I’m not questioning” Curry’s decision, suggested that Curry couldn’t keep up because of being out of shape, possibly causing this injury.

“The weight he came in at [more than 300 pounds], it wasn’t outrageous for Eddy,” Walsh said. “He’s a big man. My feeling was he could lose that weight rather quickly. The problem was at the pace we’re going now, his body just wasn’t ready for it.”

And it’s a far different pace than D’Antoni’s first two camps with the Knicks, one designed to take advantage of a roster with 11 new players, and athletic ones such as Stoudemire, Raymond Felton and Anthony Randolph — even surprisingly athletic Russian rookie center Timofey Mozgov.

Players who can run. And run. And run.

“We have some athletes out here,” D’Antoni said. “So we feel like in January and February, this will pay off.”

“We’ve got fast, athletic bigs who can get up and down with the best of them,” Stoudemire said. “So we’ve got to take advantage of that. And we’re also versatile, where our bigs can also catch the ball at midcourt and break the defense down and create for themselves.”

Curry, who did not speak to reporters Monday and is one of only two players left from Isiah Thomas’ regime (Wilson Chandler is the other), pulled up lame during a Sunday scrimmage, sending red flags flying again about his health.

Last year, he tore a calf muscle the first day of camp and didn’t play until Nov. 18.

The year before, he missed the first week of camp with a stomach virus.

Curry won’t travel with the Knicks when they leave for Europe on Wednesday and will miss all of camp.